Anonymous wrote:This is gonna sound super conspiratorial but does anyone else feel like there is a larger force at play behind all of this with Biden and Trump and we are being distracted so something bigger can be implemented or go down? Is mainstream media a shill to something far more sinister at play?
Why on earth would they interview him seeming incoherent on the heels of that debate!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll vote for Joe regardless, but I think the damage is irreparable.
So essentially you’ll vote for someone who can’t function? Do you have any standards at all?
Not PP, but I feel similarly. And my standard is voting for the candidate that is mostly likely to result in four years of an administration that makes policy choices that align with my view of what is in the best interest of our country. Given this particular election cycle, that means Biden....or almost anybody that could replace him at the top of the democratic ticket.
And you are fine with Hunter advising his father in the WH?
More so that Jared trading favors with the Saudis. Two billion and a hotel would be just the start of that corrupt relationship.
What Hunter Biden, the son of America’s vice president, and Christopher Heinz, the stepson of the chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations (later to be secretary of state), were creating was an international private equity firm. It was anchored by the Heinz family alternative investment fund, Rosemont Capital. The new firm would be populated by political loyalists and positioned to strike profitable deals overseas with foreign governments and officials with whom the US government was negotiating.
By the summer of 2009, the 39-year-old Hunter joined forces with the son of another powerful figure in American politics, Chris Heinz. Senator John Heinz of Pennsylvania had tragically died in a 1991 airplane crash when Chris was 18.
Joining them in the Rosemont venture was Devon Archer, a longtime Heinz and Kerry friend.
The three friends established a series of related LLCs. The trunk of the tree was Rosemont Capital, the alternative investment fund of the Heinz Family Office. Rosemont Farm is the name of the Heinz family’s 90-acre estate outside Fox Chapel, Pennsylvania.
The small fund grew quickly. According to an email revealed as part of a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation, Rosemont described themselves as “a $2.4 billion private equity firm co-owned by Hunter Biden and Chris Heinz,” with Devon Archer as “Managing Partner.”
The partners attached several branches to the Rosemont Capital trunk, including Rosemont Seneca Partners, LLC, Rosemont Seneca Technology Partners, and Rosemont Realty.
Of the various deals in which these Rosemont entities were involved, one of the largest and most troubling concerns was Rosemont Seneca Partners.
Rather than set up shop in New York City, the financial capital of the world, Rosemont Seneca leased space in Washington, DC. They occupied an all-brick building on Wisconsin Avenue, the main thoroughfare of exclusive Georgetown. Their offices would be less than a mile from John and Teresa Kerry’s 23-room Georgetown mansion, and just two miles from both Joe Biden’s office in the White House and his residence at the Naval Observatory.
Hunter and Chris Heinz set up a $2.4 billion private equity fund while Kerry was SOS and Biden VP.
How is that ok, but Kushner not?
Did Hunter or Heinz work in senior policy positions in the White House even though they could not get a security without special presidential dispensation?
That's a pretty fu**in'BIG difference.
And unlike Kushner, Hunter actually has decades of experience working in international investment banking (with MBNA, etc).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll vote for Joe regardless, but I think the damage is irreparable.
So essentially you’ll vote for someone who can’t function? Do you have any standards at all?
Not PP, but I feel similarly. And my standard is voting for the candidate that is mostly likely to result in four years of an administration that makes policy choices that align with my view of what is in the best interest of our country. Given this particular election cycle, that means Biden....or almost anybody that could replace him at the top of the democratic ticket.
And you are fine with Hunter advising his father in the WH?
More so that Jared trading favors with the Saudis. Two billion and a hotel would be just the start of that corrupt relationship.
What Hunter Biden, the son of America’s vice president, and Christopher Heinz, the stepson of the chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations (later to be secretary of state), were creating was an international private equity firm. It was anchored by the Heinz family alternative investment fund, Rosemont Capital. The new firm would be populated by political loyalists and positioned to strike profitable deals overseas with foreign governments and officials with whom the US government was negotiating.
By the summer of 2009, the 39-year-old Hunter joined forces with the son of another powerful figure in American politics, Chris Heinz. Senator John Heinz of Pennsylvania had tragically died in a 1991 airplane crash when Chris was 18.
Joining them in the Rosemont venture was Devon Archer, a longtime Heinz and Kerry friend.
The three friends established a series of related LLCs. The trunk of the tree was Rosemont Capital, the alternative investment fund of the Heinz Family Office. Rosemont Farm is the name of the Heinz family’s 90-acre estate outside Fox Chapel, Pennsylvania.
The small fund grew quickly. According to an email revealed as part of a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation, Rosemont described themselves as “a $2.4 billion private equity firm co-owned by Hunter Biden and Chris Heinz,” with Devon Archer as “Managing Partner.”
The partners attached several branches to the Rosemont Capital trunk, including Rosemont Seneca Partners, LLC, Rosemont Seneca Technology Partners, and Rosemont Realty.
Of the various deals in which these Rosemont entities were involved, one of the largest and most troubling concerns was Rosemont Seneca Partners.
Rather than set up shop in New York City, the financial capital of the world, Rosemont Seneca leased space in Washington, DC. They occupied an all-brick building on Wisconsin Avenue, the main thoroughfare of exclusive Georgetown. Their offices would be less than a mile from John and Teresa Kerry’s 23-room Georgetown mansion, and just two miles from both Joe Biden’s office in the White House and his residence at the Naval Observatory.
Hunter and Chris Heinz set up a $2.4 billion private equity fund while Kerry was SOS and Biden VP.
How is that ok, but Kushner not?
Did Hunter or Heinz work in senior policy positions in the White House even though they could not get a security without special presidential dispensation?
That's a pretty fu**in'BIG difference.
And unlike Kushner, Hunter actually has decades of experience working in international investment banking (with MBNA, etc).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep checking the news wondering when he is going to drop out. Come on people, this is getting ridiculous. Even if you argue he is ok right now he will progressively get worse. He will not be better at the next debate. He will lose the election.
Yes, I think the real question is whether he’s fit for office for the next 4 months, not whether he would be fit for the next 4 years after that! It’s an insane suggestion, truly.
Totally agree
He can't "work" more than about 4 hours a day. He's NOT fit for office now and won't get better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll vote for Joe regardless, but I think the damage is irreparable.
So essentially you’ll vote for someone who can’t function? Do you have any standards at all?
Not PP, but I feel similarly. And my standard is voting for the candidate that is mostly likely to result in four years of an administration that makes policy choices that align with my view of what is in the best interest of our country. Given this particular election cycle, that means Biden....or almost anybody that could replace him at the top of the democratic ticket.
And you are fine with Hunter advising his father in the WH?
More so that Jared trading favors with the Saudis. Two billion and a hotel would be just the start of that corrupt relationship.
What Hunter Biden, the son of America’s vice president, and Christopher Heinz, the stepson of the chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations (later to be secretary of state), were creating was an international private equity firm. It was anchored by the Heinz family alternative investment fund, Rosemont Capital. The new firm would be populated by political loyalists and positioned to strike profitable deals overseas with foreign governments and officials with whom the US government was negotiating.
By the summer of 2009, the 39-year-old Hunter joined forces with the son of another powerful figure in American politics, Chris Heinz. Senator John Heinz of Pennsylvania had tragically died in a 1991 airplane crash when Chris was 18.
Joining them in the Rosemont venture was Devon Archer, a longtime Heinz and Kerry friend.
The three friends established a series of related LLCs. The trunk of the tree was Rosemont Capital, the alternative investment fund of the Heinz Family Office. Rosemont Farm is the name of the Heinz family’s 90-acre estate outside Fox Chapel, Pennsylvania.
The small fund grew quickly. According to an email revealed as part of a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation, Rosemont described themselves as “a $2.4 billion private equity firm co-owned by Hunter Biden and Chris Heinz,” with Devon Archer as “Managing Partner.”
The partners attached several branches to the Rosemont Capital trunk, including Rosemont Seneca Partners, LLC, Rosemont Seneca Technology Partners, and Rosemont Realty.
Of the various deals in which these Rosemont entities were involved, one of the largest and most troubling concerns was Rosemont Seneca Partners.
Rather than set up shop in New York City, the financial capital of the world, Rosemont Seneca leased space in Washington, DC. They occupied an all-brick building on Wisconsin Avenue, the main thoroughfare of exclusive Georgetown. Their offices would be less than a mile from John and Teresa Kerry’s 23-room Georgetown mansion, and just two miles from both Joe Biden’s office in the White House and his residence at the Naval Observatory.
Hunter and Chris Heinz set up a $2.4 billion private equity fund while Kerry was SOS and Biden VP.
How is that ok, but Kushner not?
Did Hunter or Heinz work in senior policy positions in the White House even though they could not get a security without special presidential dispensation?
That's a pretty fu**in'BIG difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:not live, pretaped.Edited.
+1
Any flubs or gaffes will be edited out. The gaslighting from Democrats will continue, as usual.
Anonymous wrote:not live, pretaped.Edited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep checking the news wondering when he is going to drop out. Come on people, this is getting ridiculous. Even if you argue he is ok right now he will progressively get worse. He will not be better at the next debate. He will lose the election.
Yes, I think the real question is whether he’s fit for office for the next 4 months, not whether he would be fit for the next 4 years after that! It’s an insane suggestion, truly.
Totally agree